Poland Immigration Detention

Poland has experienced a sharp drop in the numbers of people applying for asylum since 2017. Yet, anti-immigrant rhetoric dominates public discourse, foreigners are viewed as security threats, and pushbacks are common along the border with Belarus. While material conditions in detention centres appear to meet basic standards, Poland rarely considers “alternatives to detention,” systematically detains families with children, does not have adequate mechanisms to identify victims of torture, and requires detainees to pay for their detention.

Immigration Detention in Poland

Detention orders frequently lack individualised assessments and observers argue that detention measures are not applied as a last resort.

Detainees are required to pay for their detention.

The country places high numbers of families with children in detention.

There are no well-developed mechanisms for identifying victims of violence and medical checks are not provided when entering detention.

Although the law stipulates that asylum seekers should not be detained if detention constitutes a threat to their life or health, courts rarely consider mental health when issuing detention orders.

1. INTRODUCTION

Poland has not faced the same immigration-related challenges that some of its European neighbours have experienced and yet public discourse in the country is rife with anti-immigrant rhetoric that portrays foreigners as security threats. Like its “Visegrad Group” counterparts—the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia—Poland has refused to participate in efforts to improve the EU asylum system and rejected a quota system aimed at distributing asylum seekers more evenly.[1] Poland’s interior minister has characterised refugees as a “ticking time bomb.”[2]

Poland refused entry to 34,485 non-EU nationals in 2016, the third highest figure amongst EU states that year.[3] Very few asylum seekers are granted protection: more than 80 percent of asylum requests are rejected in the first instance while 98.6 percent are rejected upon appeal.[4] In 2017, 5,053 people lodged applications, but only 150 were granted refugee status and 340 subsidiary protection. These developments are taking place against a backdrop of steep declines in asylum requests: there were 5,045 in 2017, down from 12,305 in 2016.[5]

Asylum seekers are routinely pushed back across country’s eastern borders and denied access to asylum procedures. This practice is especially common at the border with Belarus—at the crossing of Terespol—where asylum seekers, predominantly from Tajikistan, Georgia, and the Russian Republic of Chechnya, are illegally returned to Belarus.[6] In 2016, the UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) expressed concern over the difficulties faced by asylum seekers seeking to apply for protection at the Terespol border.[7] Several cases of push backs of Chechen asylum seekers, including three families, have been submitted to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which has granted interim measures in all of them. Poland has repeatedly refused to comply with these measures.[8]

In early 2017, the government proposed a draft amendment to the Law on Protection, which would impose detention on all individuals applying for asylum at the border, accelerate asylum proceedings at the border, and enforce removals without the possibility of appeal. The amendment also foresees development of a list of safe countries of origin, which would potentially include the Russian Federation, as well as a list of safe third countries, potentially including Ukraine and Belarus.[9] Given that more than 80 percent of asylum applications in 2017 were filed by individuals of Russian (3,536 applications) or Ukrainian (668 applications) origin,[10] this amendment would render the vast majority of asylum claims unfounded. As of October 2018, the amendment process was still on-going.[11]

Poland places approximately 1,200 people in immigration-related detention each year. Although material conditions in detention centres generally meet minimum standards, observers have criticised the prison-like set up of some of these facilities. Concerns have also been expressed about the lack of consideration of “alternatives to detention,” the failure to provide separate detention decisions for children detained with their parents, the lack of adequate mechanisms to identify victims of torture or other forms of violence, and policy of requiring detainees to pay for their detention.

2. LAWS, POLICIES, PRACTICES

2.1 Key norms. The Law on Foreigners (Ustawa o cudzoziemcach), adopted in December 2013, overhauled Poland’s legal framework governing migration. The law regulates the entry, transit, stay, and exit of non-citizens, and also contains provisions relating to immigration detention (areszt dla cudzoziemcow). The detention of asylum seekers is provided in the 2003 Law on Protection (Ustawa o udzielaniu cudzoziemcom ochrony na terytorium Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej), which has been amended several times, and which sets out the rules and procedures for granting international protection in Poland.

2.2 Grounds for detention. According to the Law on Foreigners, a non-citizen can be detained if: 1) it is probable that a return decision, with no possibility for a voluntary departure period, will be issued; 2) a return decision, with no possibility for a voluntary departure period, has already been issued and it is necessary to ensure its enforcement; 3) it is deemed necessary to ensure transfer of a person to a non-EU or Schengen country based on international agreement and an immediate transfer is not feasible; or 4) to ensure transfer to an EU country under the Dublin Regulation if there is a severe risk of absconding, an immediate transfer is not feasible, non-custodial measures are deemed inadequate, and the person has failed to leave Polish territory within a specified period (Article 398(a)).

In 2016, the HRC expressed concern at the high number of migrants and asylum seekers, including children, detained in Poland and urged the country to refrain from detaining non-citizens and, if detention is imposed, to ensure that the measure is reasonable, necessary, and proportionate in the individual circumstances of the case.[12] Similar concerns have also been expressed by civil society organisations: in 2017, the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights (HFHR) noted that detention is not used as a measure of last resort,[13] while in 2010, a study by the Halina Niec Legal Aid Center (HNLAC) revealed that the grounds and justifications given in court rulings were often extremely similar, indicating an insufficient individual assessment of the specific circumstances in each case.[14]

2.3 Asylum seekers. The December 2015 amendment to the Law on Protection transposed the EU (Recast) Reception Conditions Directive and the Dublin III Regulation. This amendment modified the grounds for the detention of asylum seekers, mirroring those provided for in the Reception Conditions Directive. Accordingly, an applicant for international protection may be detained: 1) when it is necessary to establish their identity; 2) in order to gather information regarding their application for international protection, which could not be obtained in the absence of detention, in particular when there is a risk of absconding; 3) if the non-citizen is in pre-removal detention in accordance with the EU Returns Directive and had previously had the opportunity to apply for asylum and it can be substantiated that they are making the application for international protection purely in order to delay or frustrate the enforcement of the return decision; 4) for state security or public order reasons; or 5) in accordance with the Dublin Regulation, when there is a serious risk of absconding but an immediate transfer is not feasible (Article 87(1)).

The risk of absconding is determined to exist if the applicant for international protection does not have their identity documents; unlawfully crossed or attempted to cross the state’s border (unless they arrived directly from a territory where their life or freedom was threatened and showed viable reasons for their irregular entry and applied immediately for asylum); or they entered Poland during the period of an entry ban (Article 87(2)).

A controversial ground that had been frequently used to justify detention of asylum seekers was removed in the 2015 amendment to the Law on Protection. It permitted detention in order to prevent the abuse of asylum proceedings. A 2010 assessment of detention orders by HNLAC revealed that authorities tended to conflate irregular border crossings with the abuse of asylum proceedings, and found that it was used to justify detention measures in 24 of 46 cases assessed by the organisation.[15]

Under the Law on Foreigners (Article 406(1)(2)) and the Law on Protection (Article 88a(3)), asylum seekers should not be detained if detention constitutes a threat to their life or health. Asylum seekers with disabilities are also supposed to be exempt from detention (Article 88(a)(3)). However, the HFHR reports that in practice poor mental or psychological health is very rarely accepted by courts as sufficient grounds for not placing an individual in, or releasing an individual from, immigration detention. It is the physical, rather than the psychological, condition of migrants and asylum seekers that is more often taken into consideration by courts.[16]

In 2013, the UN Committee against Torture (CAT) expressed concern that asylum seekers, including children, were detained in guarded centres in prison-like conditions prior to their expulsion, and recommended that Poland refrain from detaining them.[17]

In 2016, Poland detained a total of 603 asylum seekers, compared to 246 in 2017—figures that constituted approximately five percent of the total number of people seeking international protection in these two years.[18]

2.4 Children. Polish legislation lays down different rules on the detention of children depending on whether the child is an asylum seeker and the age of the child. Under the Law on Protection, unaccompanied child asylum seekers may not be detained (Article 88(a)(3)(3)). Rather, they are to be placed in foster care or in a care-educational shelter (Article 62). However, according to the Law on Foreigners, if applicants for international protection refuse to undergo medical examinations to determine their age, they are to be automatically considered adults (Article 397(6)).

The Law on Foreigners fails to prohibit the detention of unaccompanied children, though it does prohibit the detention of children under the age of 15. Like in the Czech Republic and Finland, children who have turned 15 are subject to detention. The court decides whether the child should be placed in a care-educational centre or in a detention centre, taking into consideration various elements, including the circumstances surrounding their apprehension and personal situation (Articles 397(1)-(3) and 414(4)).

Unaccompanied children may only be placed in a “guarded centre” (rather than a “deportation-arrest”) and must be separated from adults (Articles 397(1)-(3) and 414(4)). In practice, they are mainly confined at the Ketrzyn guarded centre, which has dedicated rooms for children.[19]

Accompanied children, meanwhile, can only be placed in a guarded centre (and not deportation-arrest) and are accommodated together with their guardian (Law on Foreigners, Article 414(3)). In 2017, children were detained in the Ketrzyn, Biala Podlaska, and Przemysl centres.[20] As the EU Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) observed, children detained with their parents do not receive separate detention decisions—a policy that the GDP has also observed in Latvia and Lithuania. Rather, they are considered as being accommodated within a detention centre in order to preserve family unity. According to the FRA, this practice may leave the child in a legal vacuum and undermine their right to challenge their detention.[21]

Compared to other EU member states, Poland detains high numbers of families with children.[22] In 2016, 292 children were placed in detention centres with their parents;[23] in 2014, 347 children (of whom 18 were unaccompanied), were detained; in 2013, 374 (of whom three were unaccompanied); in 2012, 127 (of whom 16 were unaccompanied); in 2011, 201 (of whom 14 were unaccompanied), and in 2010, 270 (of whom one was unaccompanied).[24] According to the Ombudsman for Children and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, the detention of families with children and unaccompanied children between 15-18 continued into 2018.[25]

Poland’s practice of detaining children has attracted considerable international criticism. In 2018, the ECtHR ruled in Bistieva and others v. Poland that the country’s practice of detaining families with children violated the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The case concerned the detention of a Russian national and her three children at the Ketrzyn guarded centre. The ECtHR ruled that that although there was some risk that the family would abscond, this was insufficient reason to justify an almost six-month detention period. Poland did not observe the best interests of the child and failed to apply detention as a last resort. The country thus violated their right to respect for family and private life, set forth in Article 8 of the ECHR.[26]

In 2016, the UN HRC expressed concern at the large number of children in immigration detention in Poland. The committee urged the country to ensure that children are only detained as a measure of last resort and for the shortest appropriate period of time, and that their detention takes into account their best interests.[27] The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) expressed similar concerns in 2015, in particular, its disappointment that the 2013 amendments to the Law on Foreigners had failed to remove provisions allowing for the detention of asylum-seeking children with their family members. The committee urged Poland to avoid all forms of detention of asylum seekers below the age of 18 and families with children, and to consider alternatives prior to detention.[28]

In 2014, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) also expressed concerns regarding the detention of children. The committee highlighted the detention of minors with their parents in guarded centres for asylum seekers—a situation that prevents such children from accessing an appropriate education. The committee recommended that Poland refrain from detaining asylum-seeking minors and fully implement the revised Act on the Education System to address their educational difficulties by providing language classes or tutorial assistance in their mother tongue.[29]

Concerns about the treatment of children in immigration detention are longstanding. Following a 2016 monitoring visit, the Polish Ombudsman noted that the Ketrzyn centre, which is the main centre where children are detained, did not have a permanently employed pediatrician.[30] In 2011, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) expressed concern that in some facilities, children’s nutritional needs were not given sufficient attention.[31] The CPT also expressed concern about whether any activities were provided for children, in particular at Lesznowola.[32]

According to the FRA, teachers from local schools provide classes in detention centres, but language assistance is frequently lacking and children are limited to just 18 hours of class-time per week.[33] Agreements have been concluded between border guards, educational institutions, and local authorities to ensure that classrooms with professional teachers are established in detention centres. However, education hours remain very limited: 27 hours in Ketrzyn and even less in Biala Podlaska.[34] The situation is better in Przemysl, where compulsory schooling was implemented in January 2018.[35] (Before this, civil society organisations had noted that classes were carried out by detention staff rather than by professional educators, did not follow a uniform programme, and were organised without age division.)[36]

There have also been some efforts recently to improve activities for children and provide them with recreational facilities. Centres in Przemysl and Ketrzyn now have well-equipped playgrounds, and Ketrzyn and Biala Podlaska purchased video game consoles.[37]

2.5 Other vulnerable groups. According to the Law on Foreigners (Article 400(2)) and Law on Protection (Article 88(a)(3)), persons who are victims of violence are not to be detained. In practice, however, there is no effective mechanism for identification of such cases—an issue highlighted by the HFHR and the Zbigniew Holda Association. The HFHR has documented numerous cases where torture survivors have been unlawfully detained.[38]

Victims of trafficking are not explicitly protected from immigration detention. Both the HRC and CRC have thus recommended that Poland amend its legislation to include a provision prohibiting the criminal prosecution, detention, and punishment of trafficked persons for activities they were involved in as a direct consequence of their being trafficked.[39]

2.6 Length of detention. Pursuant to the Law on Foreigners, a non-citizen arrested by the Border Guard or the police for immigration-related reasons may only be detained for an initial period not exceeding 72 hours in their facilities. If the police apprehended the non-citizen, they should transfer the person to the Border Guard. The Border Guard has a maximum of 48 hours to request a court to issue a detention order, which in turn should be ordered within 24 hours (Article 394(1)-(5)).

The initial detention order issued by the court can last for a maximum of 90 days. In cases where the enforcement of a return takes longer than 90 days due to a lack of cooperation from the detainee or delays in receiving the necessary documentation from a third country, the initial 90-day period can be extended up to one year. The detention period can further be extended up to 18 months if the detainee appeals their deportation order (Law on Foreigners, Article 403(1)-(5)).

The 12-month detention period under the Law on Foreigners does not include the time that a non-citizen spent in asylum detention (Article 403(4)). According to the Law on Protection, an applicant for international protection can be placed in detention for 60 days. If a person applies for asylum while already detained under the Law on Foreigners and the grounds for detention listed in the Law on Protection exist, their detention can be extended by 90 days from the moment of their asylum application. In both scenarios, if the asylum proceedings are not concluded during the period of 60 or 90 days and the grounds justifying detention still exist, detention can be extended up to six months (Law on Protection, Article 89(1)-(5)).

In 2010, the UN HRC expressed concern about the absence of specific laws concerning the detention of foreigners after the deadline for their expulsion, as well as reported cases of detention in transit zones extending beyond the expulsion deadline without a court order. The committee urged Poland to limit the length of detention in transit zones and to ensure that any detention extension is based on a court order.[40]

Polish legislation does not explicitly prevent re-detention however in practice, the courts do not allow periods of detention exceeding 12 months.[41]

The average length of detention in guarded centres (for an explanation of detention centre types, see 3: Detention Infrastructure) was 75 days in 2017; 71 days in 2016; 75 days in 2015; and 66 days in 2014.[42] In 2016 the average length of detention for asylum seekers was 68 days[43], an increase from 2015 when the average length was 65.8 days.[44] In 2010, the average length of detention was 59 days in guarded centres and 69 days in deportation-arrests.”[45]

2.7 Procedural guarantees. Under both the Law on Foreigners and the Law on Protection, migration-related detention is to be ordered and extended by a district court, upon the request of the border guard. Reportedly, courts usually accept the border guard’s arguments.[46] Both pieces of legislation also provide for a non-citizen to receive a hearing before the court makes its decision (Law on Foreigners, Articles 401(1) and 410(1); Law on Protection, Article 88(b)(1)). The non-citizen should be informed by the court, in a language they understand, about the grounds for their detention, detention procedures, and their rights (Law on Foreigners, Article 402(2); Law on Protection, Article 88(b)(4)).

Upon admission to the detention facility, the detainee must be informed—in a language they can understand—about their rights and obligations (Law on Foreigner, Article 411). In 2010, the UN HRC expressed concern that detained foreigners are often unable to learn about their rights, because boards containing such information are often only displayed in offices and interrogation rooms, are only available in Polish, and some interpreters are insufficiently qualified to translate. The committee thus urged Poland to ensure that non-citizens have easy access to information on their rights and in a language that they can understand—even if this requires the centre to provide a qualified interpreter.[47]

The extension of a detention order by a court constitutes a de facto automatic review of detention.[48] Foreign nationals have the right to appeal their detention, and its extension by a district court, to the court of higher instance. Such an appeal should be made within seven days of the non-citizen receiving the order, and the court has seven days to examine the request (Law on Foreigners, Article 403(8); Law on Protection, Article 88(b)(3)).[49] Civil society organisations, however, have observed that the appeal procedure can be complicated and appeals need to be submitted in Polish, resulting in few appeals actually being filed.[50] In addition, court rulings often lack an in-depth analysis of the non-citizen’s personal situation, and the reasons for their detention tend to be very general and without direct reference to the individual situation of the person concerned.[51]

Under the Code of Penal Procedure, asylum seekers are entitled to request free legal assistance for the review of their detention.[52] The Law on Protection provides that when ordering the detention of an asylum seeker, the court should inform them about this entitlement (Article 88(b)(4)). According to HFHR however, most asylum seekers are generally not aware of this and are unable to complete the necessary documentation, which is in Polish. Detainees who have not applied for international protection are not granted free legal counsel. Although legal assistance is often provided by NGOs,[53] such support was reduced in 2016 and 2017 due to a lack of funding caused by the delay in implementing the EU Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund (AMIF).[54]

According to the Law on Foreigners, immigration detainees are entitled to lodge complaints regarding conditions of, and treatment in, detention to the authority in charge of the facility (Article 415(1)). Complaints, however, appear to be rarely made. For instance, between January 2008 and March 2011, just 13 complaints were lodged in Biala Podlaska guarded centre, all of which were considered unfounded. During the same period, three complaints were filed in Ketrzyn, one in Warsaw, and two in Krosno Odrzanskie. No complaints were filed in Przemysl, Bialystok, or Klodzko detention facilities during that period.[55]

The Law on Foreigners explicitly provides for compensation for unlawful detention (Law on Foreigners, article 407(1)).

2.8 Detaining authorities and institutions. All seven operative immigration detention centres are managed and operated by the border guard. The Interior Ministry is the custodial authority responsible for immigration detainees.[56] The Border Guard and the police are authorised to apprehend people for immigration reasons (Article 394(2)).

2.9 Non-custodial measures. When deciding on a detention order, the court should first consider whether non-custodial measures would be adequate (Law on Foreigners, Article 401(5); Law on Protection, Articles 88a(1) and 88(b)(2)). The Law on Foreigners provides four such measures: regular reporting to the border guard, bail, relinquishing travel documents, and/or residing in a specific place of residence (Article 398(2)). The Law on Protection lists the same measures, with the exception of relinquishing travel documents (Article 88(1)). In 2017, of the 2,314 cases of alternatives to detention that were reportedly granted, 2,094 were reporting obligations, 1,818 were residence restrictions, 49 were orders to surrender travel documents; and 4 were orders to pay bail.[57]

The use of alternatives to detention and the impact they have on detention rates are not clear. According to the 2017 Ombudsman report, non-custodial measures are rarely considered in practice and thus detention is not used solely as a measure of last resort.[58] Civil society groups had previously expressed similar concerns.[59] On the other hand, the number of non-citizens granted alternatives to detention has recently increased: from 1,411 in 2016 to 2,314 in 2017.[60] The adoption of alternatives has appeared to lead to decreases in detention rates for certain groups. For instance, border guard data shows that after the introduction of alternatives measures in 2014, the number of detained children decreased by more than 40 percent.[61]

2.10 Regulation of detention conditions. The Law on Foreigners lays down several rules related to the place and conditions of detention. Immigration detainees are to be held in “deportation-arrests” (areszt dla cudzoziemcow) or “guarded centres” (strzezone osrodki). Non-citizens are to be placed in deportation-arrests if there is a risk that that they will not comply with the rules governing guarded centres (Article 399). However, in 2011 the HFHR observed that in practice, this provision was not interpreted in a coherent manner and that officials often lacked a firm understanding of the categories of non-citizens to be placed in the two types of facility. Reportedly, foreigners who break the law are accommodated in guarded centres while those who stay in Poland irregularly for a long period of time without committing any crimes are held in deportation-arrests.[62] Both guarded centres and deportation-arrests can hold asylum seekers and irregular migrants; however, asylum seekers are rarely held in deportation-arrests, and only if it is deemed necessary for state security or public safety.[63]

Men and women, as well as children, are to be accommodated separately, while families are to be placed together (Article 414). Non-citizens held in deportation-arrests are to be given the opportunity to walk outside for two hours daily, while detainees in guarded centres are to be allowed to move freely within the facility between 7am and 10pm (Article 416). According to the HFHR, this provision is generally respected.[64]

Upon admission to a centre, non-citizens should undergo a medical examination (Article 413). Detained foreign nationals have the right to health care, including hospitalisation, medication and sanitary products; contact with close friends/relatives, legal representatives, Polish authorities, diplomatic representatives and NGOs; uninterrupted nine hours of sleep per day; clothing and shoes; access to the internet and a library, and visits (Articles 415 and 417).

The 2015 Ordinance of the Interior Ministry and Administration on the guarded centres and detention centres for foreigners (Rozporządzenie Ministra Spraw Wewnętrznych w sprawie strzeżonych ośrodków i aresztów dla cudzoziemców) spells out detailed regulations for detention facilities. Rooms in guarded centres and cells in deportation-arrests are to have heating, ventilation, beds, shelves for personal belongings, tables, and chairs. Rooms for non-citizens in the guarded centres and cells in the deportation-arrests are not to be smaller than 3 square metres per male detainee, and 4 square metres per female or minor. The Ordinance provides that immigration detainees should receive three meals per day, including one hot meal. It establishes detailed rules regarding daily dietary allowances based on detainee’s age. For example, adults are to receive meals and beverages of at least 2,600 calories per day, while daily caloric intake for children 12-18, sick, as well as pregnant and breastfeeding women is to be 2,600-3,400.

The Law on Foreigners provides for disciplinary sanctions for those that breach the rules of a centre: detainees may be banned from participating in sport and cultural activities (with the exception of library use) or buying food or tobacco products for up to seven days (Articles 419-423). According to reports, these sanctions are very rarely imposed because detainees are aware that they may be transferred to the Przemysl deportation-arrest—which is known for a much stricter regime than the country’s guarded centres (see 3: Detention Infrastructure)—if they commit a serious breach of centre’s rules.[65]

2.11 Domestic monitoring. The Commissioner for Human Rights (Ombudsman) acting as the National Mechanism for the Prevention of Torture has a mandate to visit all detention centres. In 2016, the Commissioner visited centres in Biala Podlaska, Lesznowola, Krosno Odrzanskie, and Ketrzyn; and in 2017, the centres in Przemysl and Krosno Odrzanskie.[66]

A number of civil society organisations also visit the centres, including the HFHR, HNLAC, Association for Legal Intervention (SIP), and the Rule of Law Institute Foundation. Authorisation from the border guard’s headquarters must be acquired before every visit, however NGOs generally do not face problems in accessing centres. The visits are not for the purpose of monitoring conditions and treatment in detention, but rather to offer legal aid.[67]

2.13 Criminalisation. Under the Petty Offence Code (Articles 49(a) and 24(1)), irregular entry is subject to a fine of up to 1,160 EUR. Irregular stay is also punishable with fines under the Law on Foreigners (Article 465(1)).[72] According to reports however, fines are rarely imposed in practice.[73]

2.14 Cost of detention. The total cost of Poland’s immigration detention operations in 2010 amounted to around 9 million EUR. Roughly 7.6 million EUR was spent on staff and half a million EUR on the maintenance of detention infrastructure.[74]

Like in the Czech Republic and Germany, non-citizens are required to pay for their detention.[75]

2.15 Trends and statistics. Poland detained 1,290 non-citizens in 2017; 1,201 in 2016; 1,051 in 2015; and 1,322 in 2014. Of these detainees, 247 applied for asylum from detention in 2017; 289 in 2016; 281 in 2015; and 236 in 2014.[76] In total, the country detained 603 asylum seekers in 2016 and 246 in 2017, figures that constituted approximately five percent of the total number of people seeking international protection during these two years.[77]

Between 2014 and 2017, the most common nationalities of detainees were Russian, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese. Russians constituted approximately 36 percent of all detainees in 2017; 37 percent in 2016; 27 percent in 2015; and 45 percent in 2014.[78]

DETENTION INFRASTRUCTURE

3.1 Summary. Poland uses specialised detention facilities to confine non-citizens on immigration-related grounds. As explained above (section 2.10: Regulation of detention conditions), Poland operates two types of dedicated facilities that can be used for long-term immigration detention: “deportation-arrests” (areszty w celu wydalenia) and “guarded centres” (strzezone osrodki). A key difference between these two types of facilities are their security regimes: deportation-arrests have a more severe internal security regime than guarded centres.[79]

Until the early 2000s, the most common type of detention centres were deportation-arrests, which were located in police stations and border guard units. By 2009, the police had ceased operating these immigration detention facilities, which were transferred to the border guard. Before they came under the authority of the border guard, deportation-arrests had been criticised for mixing administrative detainees with criminal detainees.[80]

In recent years, the number of deportation-arrests has decreased significantly. The GDP identified some two dozen deportation-arrests in operation during the period 2007-2008. As of January 2013, Poland operated only six such facilities, with a total estimated capacity of 136.[81] By November 2015, the number of had declined to two—one in Bialystok and one in Przemysl—with a combined capacity of 48.[82] Currently the only deportation-arrests still in operation is the one in Przemysl.[83]

Meanwhile, the number of guarded centres has increased. Prior to joining the Schengen Area, Poland only had one guarded centre for non-citizens, located in Lesznowola. Established in 1996, the centre was run by the police until the border guard took over its management in 2008.[84] In preparation for Poland’s formal entry into the Schengen Area, four new guarded centres had been opened in the east of the country by early 2008 (where most asylum seekers are apprehended): in Biala Podlaska, Bialystok, Ketrzyn and Przemysl.[85] Construction of these centres was funded in part by the European Fund for Asylum Seekers.[86] In January 2009, the Krosno Odrzanskie deportation-arrest, located on the country's western border, was also converted into a guarded centre for non-citizens.[87]

Poland currently operates seven long-term detention centres.[88] The six guarded centres are located in Biala Podlaska (capacity of 130), Bialystok (capacity of 122), Ketrzyn (capacity of 122), Krosno Odrzanskie (capacity of 56), Lesznowola (capacity 42), and Przemysl (capacity of 103). The only remaining deportation-arrest is located in Przemysl (capacity of 33).[89] Poland also operates one short-term detention centre in a transit area at the Warsaw International Airport.[90] Individuals refused entry into the country are held there. As of January 2013, it had a capacity of 30.[91]

As of December 2017, the total capacity of long-term detention facilities in the country was 641,[92] compared to 558 in November 2015,[93] and 881 in January 2013.[94]

3.3 Conditions in detention. According to the HFHR, all six guarded centres (Bialystok, Krosno Odrzanskie, Lesznowola, Biaia Podlaska, Ketrzyn and Przemysl) are in good condition. They were all built after 2008, except for Krosno and Lesznowola, which were both recently renovated. Yet, the design and layout of some of the centres closely resembles that of a prison, with thick walls, bars in the windows, and high exterior walls topped with barbed wire.[96]

All guarded centres are either separated by gender, or have two separate blocks: one for men, and one for families (family blocks also confine women and unaccompanied minors). In 2012, authorities began attempting to place detainees in different centres according to their gender and age—this was declared an official policy by the Interior Ministry in 2013. Since then, there have been modifications in the assignation of centres to a particular gender or age group. As of January 2018 only men are held in in Bialystok, Krosno, and Lesznowola.[97] The other three centres—Biala Podlaska, Ketrzyn, and Przemysl—are reserved for women and families with children of school age (up to six years of age) (although men were still confined in Przemysl during the Ombudsman’s visit, as well as families with children). The centre of Ketrzyn also has a separate area reserved for unaccompanied irregular migrant children and two places for persons with disabilities.[98]

In general, rooms hold two to eight people and are equipped with metal beds, small tables, and small wardrobes. If all of one’s personal belongings cannot be kept in the rooms they are stored in a separate space in the centre, which can be accessed only upon request. All the centres have adequate sport and recreation space including open-air space, libraries, and rooms for religious practices. For every detainee, an officer is appointed to discuss their case with them.[99]

Following its visit to Lesznowola in May 2017, the CPT noted that the material conditions (the centre’s state of repair, equipment, living space, and access to natural light) were of a good standard. Detainees were allowed to prepare their own food, and the centre employed a full-time nurse, who was also present during weekends and holidays but not at night. Doctors were visiting the centre on a contractual basis.[100] However the CPT did note that since there were no curtains in the windows, detainees had to cover windows with blankets as a protection from heat and the sun and were not allowed to open the windows without staff authorisation.

After its visit to Bialystok in May 2017, the CPT noted that rooms were of a sufficient size, and were well lit and ventilated. However, the committee noted several shortcomings—the centre’s daily budget per detainee was low and the CPT noted several complaints about quality and quantity of food; a general practitioner and a nurse were present every day but not on the weekends, and guards permanently carried truncheons and tasers, including inside accommodation areas. The CPT thus urged authorities to remedy these issues.[101]

According to the CPT, neither Lesznowola nor Bialystok carried out systematic medical screening upon detention and medical examinations took place in the presence of staff. Both centres employed border guards and educators (return care officers), and staff regularly received training, including in mediation and conflict resolution. Although most of the personnel had some notions of Russian or English, communication was reportedly still problematic. In both centres, detainees were given access during the day to well-equipped common rooms with TV, radio, internet, books, and board games; indoor gyms, and spacious outdoor areas. However, the availability of organised activities was very limited.[102]

After its 2016-2017 visits, the Ombudsman lauded some centres’ efforts to make the environment more friendly—for example, in Ketrzyn, grills were gradually being removed from windows and similar plans were made to remove bars from windows in Przemysl. It was thus recommended that bars are removed from windows in all centres, especially in those where children are held, as they create an unnecessary prison-like environment. In addition, the recent construction of a large recreation and sports area in Przemysl—comprising a children’s playground, an outdoor gym, a football and a basketball field, had recently been built.[103]

On the other hand, the Ombudsman criticised the regime in the Przemysl deportation-arrest for being disproportionately restrictive. In order to use a toilet, detainees must ask permission from a guard, and many consequently end up urinating in plastic bottles instead. Detainees are also under permanent monitoring, which is a stricter regime than that applied in the country’s penitentiary system. The Ombudsman also found that in both the deportation-arrest and the guarded centres, guards are equipped with an electric taser which is visible to detainees.[104]

In terms of medical care, all detention centres must receive visits from a physician and a nurse. In cases of emergency or when specialist treatment is required, detainees are transferred to hospitals. No early identification of victims of torture or violence is carried out upon detention, and access to psychological assistance is limited.[105] In Ketrzyn, although the centre is dedicated to women and children, only male doctors are employed, creating a communication barrier with women from certain cultures, and there is no permanently employed paediatrician.[106] The Ombudsman observed that in Krosno, a man who attempted suicide after a prolonged hunger strike not only was never consulted by a psychologist or psychiatrist but was punished for his actions and placed in the deportation-arrest centre. Phone calls with the centre’s psychologist also revealed that he had no training in, or knowledge of, the Istanbul Protocol and mechanisms for the identification of victims of torture.[107] In Przemysl, the Ombudsman’s team identified victims of torture.[108]

Besides visits from NGOs (see 2.11: Domestic monitoring), detainees may receive visits from relatives, friends, and religious groups. The visits can last for up to 90 minutes but may be longer in certain instances when permitted by the centre’s manager. Detainees may use their own mobile phones, so-long as they do not include audio and video recording systems. If they do, detainees instead receive phones without cameras from the border guard for free. Detainees should pay for calls but if they do not have sufficient means to do so, they can use the border guard’s telephones in justifiable cases.[109] The Ombudsman noted that in the Krosno centre internet access was limited, with many websites including social media networks and email providers blocked for security reasons, despite the fact that computer users are constantly monitored and records on all those using computers are kept.[110]

Transit zone. Poland also operates a holding facility in the transit area of the Warsaw International Airport, where it holds individuals who have been refused entry. They may be detained here for no longer than 24 hours, although according to reports, it has been used for periods that exceed this limit.[111] The facility has a maximum capacity of 30 and is divided into three rooms, including one large room capable of accommodating 16 persons and two smaller rooms for six and eight persons respectively.

The GDP classifies this facility as “transit zone detention” because of its location at a port of entry into the country, the repeated reports that the facility exceeds its short-term mandate, and the particular problems with respect to procedural guarantees that seem to result from the facility’s intended use as a mechanism for preventing people from entering the country.

In 2010, the UN HRC expressed concern that in some cases persons were held in this facility beyond the deadline of their expulsion and without a court order. The committee therefore urged Poland to ensure that the detention of foreigners in transit zones is not excessively protracted and that when it is extended, such measures should be based on a decision adopted by a court. The committee also noted with concern reports of poor conditions in the transit zone.[112]

On the other hand, during its 2009 visit, the CPT found that the material conditions in the facility were generally adequate. It noted that besides bunk beds, the rooms were equipped with tables and chairs, had good access to natural light, were well ventilated, and had a call system. However, other concerns were raised. For example, the CPT found that while migrants were held on the premises overnight only very rarely, in cases where they had to stay for extended periods of time, they were not provided with personal hygiene products. The CPT also criticised the failure to respect procedural safeguards. It noted that while detainees were in principle entitled to contact a lawyer, they were not actually allowed to meet this person. Although they could move freely within the detention area during the day, they were often granted only 15 to 30 minutes of outdoor exercise per day and there was no communal area. Moreover, non-citizens were not systematically provided with a copy of the forms setting out the rights of persons who are denied access to the territory. Finally, the facility’s system of recording the detention of non-citizens was found to be inadequate—in many cases, no information regarding the identity of the individual, nor the time for which they were detained, was entered into the log book.[113]

[31] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment of Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 26 November to 8 December 2009, CPT/Inf (2011) 21,” 12 July 2011, http://www.cpt.coe.int/documents/pol/2011-20-inf-eng.pdf

[32] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment of Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 26 November to 8 December 2009, CPT/Inf (2011) 21,” 12 July 2011, http://www.cpt.coe.int/documents/pol/2011-20-inf-eng.pdf

[36] Halina Niec Legal Aid Center (HNLAC), “Detention of Migrant Children in Poland. Report on Implementation of International and Domestic Standards Concerning Detention of Migrant Children,” March 2011.

[64] M. Fagasinski (Legal Assistance to Refugees and Migrants, Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights), “Detention Facility Documentation: Guarded Center and Arrest for the Purpose of Expulsion in Biala Podlaska,” 8 July 2011; M. Fagasinski, “Detention Facility Documentation: Guarded Center and Arrest for the Purpose of Expulsion in Bialystok,” 8 July 2011; M. Fagasinski, “Detention Facility Documentation: Guarded Center and Arrest for the Purpose of Expulsion in Ketrzyn,” 8 July 2011; M. Fagasinski, “Detention Facility Documentation: Guarded Center and Arrest for the Purpose of Expulsion in Klodzko,” 8 July 2011; M. Fagasinski, “Detention Facility Documentation: Guarded Center and Arrest for the Purpose of Expulsion in Przemysl,” 8 July 2011.

[65] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39,” July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

[66] National Mechanism for the Prevention of Torture, “Report on the Activities of the National Mechanism for the Prevention of Torture in 2016,” 2017, http://bit.ly/2sBpmvy; Ombudsman, “Wyciąg Strzeżony Ośrodek dla Cudzoziemców w Krośnie Odrzańskim,” January 2018, http://bit.ly/2F2ptCr; Ombudsman, “Wyciąg Strzeżony Ośrodek dla Cudzoziemców w Przemyślu,” February 2018, http://bit.ly/2EXlR4y

[80] European Parliament, “The Conditions in Centres for Third Country National (Detention Camps, Open Centres, as well as Transit Centres and Transit Zones) with a Particular Focus on Provisions and Facilities for Persons with Special Needs in the 25 EU Member States,” December 2007.

[86] European Parliament, “The Conditions in Centres for Third Country National (Detention Camps, Open Centres, as well as Transit Centres and Transit Zones) with a Particular Focus on Provisions and Facilities for Persons with Special Needs in the 25 EU Member States,” December 2007.

[95] Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights “AIDA Country Report: Poland 2017 Update,” European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE), February 2017, http://www.asylumineurope.org/reports/country/poland/; European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment of Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 26 November to 8 December 2009, CPT/Inf (2011) 21,” 12 July 2011, http://www.cpt.coe.int/documents/pol/2011-20-inf-eng.pdf

[100] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39, July 2018,” https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

[101] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39,” July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

[102] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39,” July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

[113] European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment of Punishment (CPT), “Report to the Polish Government on the Visit to Poland Carried Out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 26 November to 8 December 2009, CPT/Inf (2011) 21,” 12 July 2011, http://www.cpt.coe.int/documents/pol/2011-20-inf-eng.pdf

Migration Policy Institute tabulation of data from the United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs (2015), Trends in International Migrant Stock: Migrants by Destination and Origin (United Nations database, POP/DB/MIG/Stock/Rev.2015).

From GDP 2016 Profile on Poland: "There appears to be some evidence that the adoption of alternatives has led to decreases in the detention of certain groups. For instance, Border Guard data shows that after the introduction of alternatives measures in 2014, the number of detained children decreased by more than 40 percent."

CEDAW, Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, 1999

2003

ICERD, declaration under article 14 of the Convention

1998

CAT, declaration under article 22 of the Convention

1993

ICCPR, First Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966

1991

Ratio of complaints procedures accepted Show sources

Number

Observation Date

4/5

UN Treaty Collection

4/5

UN Treaty Collection

Relevant recommendations issued by treaty bodies Show sources

Name

Recommendation Excerpt

Recommendation Year

Human Rights Committee

§32: The State party should:
(a) Refrain from detaining asylum seekers and migrants and implement alternatives, including before deportation, and in cases where individuals are detained, ensure that the detention is reasonable, necessary and proportionate in the light of the circumstances and reassessed as it extends in time;
(b) Ensure that children are not deprived of liberty except as a measure of last resort and for the shortest appropriate period of time, taking into account their best interests;
[…]

§ 45(a): Avoid any form of detention of asylum-seekers under 18 and families with children and consider all possible alternatives, including unconditional release, prior to detention. In doing so, the Committee draws attention to the UNHCR Revised Guidelines on Applicable Criteria and Standards relating to the Detention of Asylum-Seekers (26 February 1999).

§ 51(a): Amend the existing legislation to include a provision prohibiting the criminal prosecution, detention and punishment of trafficked children for activities they were involved in as a direct consequence of their being trafficked.

§ 13: The Committee recommends that the State Party refrain from detaining asylum-seekers, including children, and guarantee them — including those who may face detention — access to independent, qualified and free legal advice and representation, in order to ensure that the protection needs of asylum seekers, refugees and other persons in need of international protection are effectively recognized.

§ 18: The State party should take measures to ensure that the detention of foreigners in transit zones is not excessively protracted and that, if the detention is to be extended, the decision is adopted by a court. The State party should ensure that the regime, services and material conditions in all deportation detention centres are in conformity with minimum international standards. Finally, the State party should ensure that detained foreigners have easy access to information on their rights, in a language they can understand, even if this requires the provision of a qualified interpreter.

2010

Consideration of reports submitted by States parties under article 40 of the Covenant: Concluding observations of the Human Rights Committee: Poland. CCPR/C/POL/CO/6. 15 November 2010

Committee against Torture

§ 12: The Committee notes with concern the absence of specific laws concerning the detention of aliens after the deadline for their expulsion and the fact that some have been detained in transit zones beyond the deadline of their expulsion without a court order. (arts. 3 and 11) The State Party should take the necessary measures to address this situation and ensure that the detention of aliens in transit zones is not excessively protracted and that, if the detention were to be extended beyond a few days, the decision is adopted by a court. § 13: The Committee also notes with concern the regime and material conditions of detention in transit zones or deportation detention centres where foreign nationals awaiting deportation under the aliens’ legislation are held. (arts. 3 and 11) The State Party should review the regime and material conditions of deportation detention centres, including the size of cells and the regime of activities of the detainees, in order to ensure that they are in conformity with minimum international standards.

2007

CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 19 OF THE CONVENTION: Conclusions and recommendations of the Committee against Torture: POLAND. CAT/C/POL/CO/4. 25 July 2007

Committee on the Rights of the Child

§ 47: The Committee recommends that the State party: (b) Ensure that asylum-seeking children temporarily placed in emergency blocks are not held together with juvenile offenders and only remain there for the shortest possible time, and not exceeding the legal maximum of three months; (c) Ensure that all children awaiting processing of their refugee claims in emergency blocks, the refugee reception centre or other forms of care have full access to education.

2002

COMMITTEE ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD: CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 44 OF THE CONVENTION: Concluding observations: Poland. CRC/C/15/Add.194. 30 October 2002

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT)

§37: The CPT recommends that [...] excessive practices [disrespectful behaviour] be stopped immediately [and] that Border Guard officers at Lesznowola and Białystok be reminded that they should treat detained foreign nationals in a respectful manner.
§38: The CPT recommends that increased vigilance be exercised and all appropriate means be used to prevent and combat this phenomenon [violence between detained foreign nationals]. This should include on-going monitoring of the behaviour of detained foreign nationals (including the identification of likely perpetrators and victims), proper reporting of confirmed and suspected cases of intimidation/violence between them and thorough investigation of all incidents.
§39: The Committee recommends that the Polish authorities seek ways to remedy these deficiencies [lack of access to fresh air and lack of curtains to protect from the sun and the heat].
§41: The Committee recommends that steps be taken to review the quality and quantity of the food provided to detained foreign nationals at the Guarded Centres visited. Further, consideration should be given to allowing foreign nationals accommodated at the Guarded Centre in Białystok to prepare their own food, as is already the case in Lesznowola.
§42: The Committee recommends that efforts be made to enlarge the offer of activities at the Guarded Centres visited [...]. This will also require additional efforts to fill all staff vacancies.
§43: The CPT recommends that steps be taken at the Guarded Centre for Foreigners in Białystok to ensure nursing cover also on weekends; further, the Committee invites the Polish authorities to verify, in both Guarded Centres visited, that a person competent to provide first aid (which should include being trained in the application of CPR and the use of a defibrillator) is present on every night shift; preferably, this person should be a qualified nurse.
§44: The CPT recommends that a full and thorough medical examination of foreign nationals be carried out upon admission at the Guarded Centres in Lesznowola and Białystok (and, as applicable, in other guarded centres); in particular, newly-arrived detainees should be systematically screened for transmissible diseases (including tuberculosis). The screening should also aim at identifying possible victims of torture, with clear rules on the procedures to be followed whenever a medical practitioner reports on any detained person who may have been the victim of torture.
§45: The CPT once again calls upon the Polish authorities to ensure that in all Guarded Centres for Foreigners medical confidentiality is observed in the same way as in the outside community. In particular, all medical examinations should be conducted out of the hearing and – unless the doctor concerned requests otherwise in a particular case – out of the sight of custodial Border Guard officers. Detained persons’ medical files and other medical documentation should not be accessible to non-medical staff.
§47: […] the Committee can only reiterate its recommendation that steps be taken to ensure that all foreign nationals detained under aliens legislation are effectively able to benefit from legal counselling and, if necessary, legal representation. For indigent foreign nationals, these services should be provided free of charge.
§49: The Committee recommends that steps be taken to increase staffing levels at the Guarded Centres for Foreigners in Lesznowola and Białystok; filling all the vacant posts should be the first priority.
§51: [...] the Committee recommends that [the practice of carrying special means (handcuffs, truncheons, pepper spray) permanently by the staff] cease without delay.
§53: The CPT recommends that steps be taken at both Lesznowola and Białystok Guarded Centres to remedy this situation [that two-stage procedure regarding strip searches was not followed in practice].

2017

2018

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), Report to the Polish Government on the visit to Poland carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39, July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT)

§ 48: every effort to be made to avoid resorting to the deprivation of liberty of minors in detention centres for foreigners; § 49: Border Guard officers at the Guarded Centre and Deportation Arrest Centre in Biała Podlaska and the Airport Deportation Arrest Centre in Warsaw to be reminded that disrespectful behaviour (including racist remarks) is unacceptable and will be punished accordingly; § 50: the mattresses at the Guarded Centre and the Deportation Arrest Centre in Biała Podlaska to be replaced; § 53: foreign nationals who are obliged to stay overnight in the holding facility in the transit area of Warsaw International Airport to be provided with personal hygiene products; § 54: the provision of food in guarded centres/deportation arrest centres to be reviewed, in the light of the remarks in paragraph 54, § 57: steps to be taken to ensure that: all foreign nationals held in the Warsaw Airport Deportation Arrest Centre are offered at least one hour of outdoor exercise per day, at the Lesznowola Guarded Centre, children are provided with activities suited to their age and adult detainees are offered a range of purposeful activities, detainees held at the Biała Podlaska Deportation Arrest Centre are allowed to move freely within the detention area during the day, all foreign nationals held at the Biała Podlaska Deportation Arrest Centre and the Airport Deportation Arrest Centre in Warsaw have access to television and are provided with board games and reading material (in the most frequently spoken foreign languages); § 66: the necessary steps to be taken to ensure that in all guarded centres/deportation arrest centres: there is nursing cover by a qualified nurse, not only during the week but also at weekends, a psychologist is present on a regular basis; newly-admitted detainees are systematically screened for transmissible diseases (including tuberculosis); whenever doctors are unable to communicate with detainees during medical examinations/consultations due to language problems, the persons concerned benefit from the services of a qualified interpreter;the record drawn up after a medical examination of a detainee, whether newly-arrived or not, contains: (i) a full account of the objective medical findings based on a thorough examination; (ii) a full account of statements made by the detainee concerned which are relevant to the medical examination, including any allegations of ill-treatment made by him/her; (iii) the doctor's conclusions in the light of (i) and (ii). In his/her conclusions, the doctor should indicate the degree of consistency between any allegations made and the objective medical findings; any foreign national whose deportation is not carried out successfully, due to the resistance from the person concerned, is medically examined upon returning to a Border Guard establishment; medical confidentiality is observed in the same way as in the outside community; in particular, all medical examinations should be conducted out of the hearing and – unless the doctor concerned requests otherwise in a particular case – out of the sight of police officers; detainees’ files should not be accessible to non-medical staff but should be the responsibility of the doctor; § 71: the Polish authorities to pursue as a matter of priority the plans to establish a legal counselling service in guarded centres/deportation arrest centres, in order to ensure that all foreign nationals detained under aliens legislation are effectively able to benefit from legal counselling and, if necessary, legal representation. For indigent foreign nationals, these services should be provided free of charge; § 72: the Polish authorities to take the necessary measures to ensure that foreign nationals who are held in the holding facility of an international airport and request to meet a lawyer are effectively able to do so; § 73: the deficiencies observed in the transit zone of Warsaw International Airport as regards the provision of rights' forms and the recording of placement in the holding facility to be remedied; § 77: the Polish authorities to review their policy as regards the use of pepper sprays in Border Guard establishments, in the light of the remarks in paragraph 77; § 78: the hand-held stun devices found at the Biała Podlaska Guarded Centre to be withdrawn from the armoury of the Centre (as well from any other Guarded Centres which have been supplied with such weapons); § 80: steps to be taken to ensure that all vehicles of law enforcement agencies which are used for
the transportation of detained persons are equipped with appropriate safety devices.

2011

2011

Report to the Polish Government on the visit to Poland carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 26 November to 8 December 2009. CPT/Inf (2011) 20. 12 July 2011

European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI)

§ 150: ECRI recommends that the reception and guarded centres be endowed with adequate staff.
§ 151: ECRI recommends again that staff coming in contact with refugees and asylum-seekers be trained in human rights and the fight against racism and racial discrimination.
§ 159: ECRI recommends to the authorities not to detain non-citizens in an illegal situation who cannot be expelled. It also recommends to the authorities not to keep children seeking asylum in guarded centres because of their parents' behaviour.

Special Rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health

2009

Website. Poland Homepage

Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially in women and children

2009

Website. Poland Homepage

Relevant recommendations by UN Special Procedures Show sources

Name

Recommendation Excerpt

Recommendation Year

Observation Date

Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially in women and children

§ 86: Legislation must be amended to include a provision prohibiting the criminal prosecution, detention and punishment of trafficked persons for activities they were
involved in as a direct consequence of their situation as trafficked persons.

2010

2010

Report of the Special Rapporteur on trafficking in persons, especially women and children, on her mission to Poland. A/HRC/14/33/Add.3. 2 June 2010

Relevant recommendations of the UN Universal Periodic Review Show sources

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment

International or Regional Bodies (IRBs)

2017

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), Report to the Polish Government on the visit to Poland carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39, July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), Report to the Polish Government on the visit to Poland carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39, July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

Do IRBs publicly report their findings from inspections? Show sources

Do IRBs publicly report their findings from detention inspections?

Observation Date

Yes

2017

European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT), Report to the Polish Government on the visit to Poland carried out by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) from 11 to 22 May 2017, CPT/Inf (2018) 39, July 2018, https://rm.coe.int/16808c7a91

During the period 2014-2017, Poland used funds provided through the EU's Asylum, Migration, and Integration Fund (AMIF) for various detention-related activities, including one or more of the following: increased staff at detention facilities; renovation of detention facilities; operational costs of running detention facilities; interpretation and healthcare services; legal assistance for detainees; leisure, cultural and educational activities at detention facilities. Proposed future regulations for this fund include encouraging recipients to consider possible joint use of reception and detention facilities by more than one Member State (see "The Way Forward, p.39).

During the period 2014-2017, Poland used funds provided through the EU's Asylum, Migration, and Integration Fund (AMIF) for various detention-related activities, including one or more of the following: increased staff at detention facilities; renovation of detention facilities; operational costs of running detention facilities; interpretation and healthcare services; legal assistance for detainees; leisure, cultural and educational activities at detention facilities. Proposed future regulations for this fund include encouraging recipients to consider possible joint use of reception and detention facilities by more than one Member State (see "The Way Forward, p.39).

During the period 2014-2017, Poland used funds provided through the EU's Asylum, Migration, and Integration Fund (AMIF) for various detention-related activities, including one or more of the following: increased staff at detention facilities; renovation of detention facilities; operational costs of running detention facilities; interpretation and healthcare services; legal assistance for detainees; leisure, cultural and educational activities at detention facilities. Proposed future regulations for this fund include encouraging recipients to consider possible joint use of reception and detention facilities by more than one Member State (see "The Way Forward, p.39).

During the period 2014-2017, Poland used funds provided through the EU's Asylum, Migration, and Integration Fund (AMIF) for various detention-related activities, including one or more of the following: increased staff at detention facilities; renovation of detention facilities; operational costs of running detention facilities; interpretation and healthcare services; legal assistance for detainees; leisure, cultural and educational activities at detention facilities. Proposed future regulations for this fund include encouraging recipients to consider possible joint use of reception and detention facilities by more than one Member State (see "The Way Forward, p.39).

Additional Resources

December 2018 Newsletter

Immigration Detention: “Never in the Best Interests of Children”

November 2018

This past summer, people across the globe watched in outrage as children were forcibly separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border and placed in hastily set up camps and cages. Overlooked in much of the criticism, however, was the fact that children are locked behind bars for immigration-related reasons in dozens of other counties across the globe, all of whom—with the notable exception of the United States—have ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Immigration Detention in Poland: Systematic Family Detention and Lack of Individualised Assessment

October 2018

Poland has experienced a sharp drop in the numbers of people applying for asylum since 2017. Yet, anti-immigrant rhetoric dominates public discourse, foreigners are viewed as security threats, and pushbacks are common along the border with Belarus. While material conditions in detention centres appear to meet basic standards, Poland rarely considers “alternatives to detention,” systematically […]

Immigration Detention in Poland

September 2016

Although Poland has not faced the same refugee challenges impacting neighbouring countries, it has adopted similar responses. It accepts only a small number of asylum seekers, opposes EU relocation quotas, and has boosted its detention efforts. It recently amended its legal framework, including the adoption of alternatives to detention and restrictions on child detention. It […]